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- $Unique_ID{BRK01981}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Women are at Risk for Heart Attacks too}
- $Subject{woman Women female females Risk risks hazard hazards danger dangers
- Heart attack Attacks disease diseases man men male males hormone hormones die
- died dead death deaths cardiovascular breast cancer cancers lung stroke
- strokes protect protecting protection estrogen premenopause premenopausal
- angina prevent preventing prevention Exercise exercises smoke Smoking
- cigarette cigarettes chest pain pains}
- $Volume{}
- $Log{
- Complications of Atherosclerosis*0009401.scf
- Exercise has Overall Benefits*0003209.scf
- Exercise Improves Circulation*0003207.scf
- Exercise Increases Metabolism*0003205.scf
- Exercise Lowers Triglycerides and Raises HDL*0003203.scf
- Exercise Strengthens the Heart*0003202.scf
- HDL Transports Cholesterol Back to the Liver*0002702.scf
- How Cholesterol Levels Affect the Arteries*0002701.scf
- Risk Factors of Atherosclerosis*0009302.scf}
-
- Copyright (c) 1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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- Women are at Risk for Heart Attacks too
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-
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-
- QUESTION: I guess I have always thought my husband was more likely to suffer
- a heart attack than I was. Lately the papers say that is not so, and that I
- might have more to worry about than he ever did. Why didn't my doctor ever
- talk to me about this, and is there anything I should know about it now?
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ANSWER: For many years, research showed that heart disease was a man's
- disease, and that women were protected from the threat of heart disease by
- their hormones. Of course, some of the facts that we were working with were
- derived from investigations in which only men were considered, and from drug
- studies in which only men were used. The numbers we are looking at now paint
- a very different picture. More than 500,000 American women die each year from
- cardiovascular disease, about half (244,000) are caused by a heart attacks.
- Compare that to 44,500 annual deaths brought about by breast cancer, 51,000
- from lung cancer and 90,000 from stroke and you realize that cardiovascular
- disease is now identified as the leading cause of death in American women.
- However, the disease as seen in women is a bit different than the
- clinical picture in men. Women tend to be older than men when they do have
- their first attack, a fact that is associated by the protection that estrogen
- (female hormone) does provide the premenopausal woman. Women tend to begin
- with chest pain (angina) rather than a full blown heart attack, and so are
- less likely to die suddenly and unexpectedly when compared to men. But when
- the first real heart attack does occur, women are less likely to survive than
- men, and more likely to die within one year of the attack. For unknown
- reasons, women seem to have a silent heart attack more frequently than men,
- and so are less likely to begin the investigations that lead to treatment than
- men are.
- You, as well as all women, should begin to take heart attacks and their
- prevention very seriously, and that at a young age. Exercise is still a great
- way of changing the odds in your favor, yet women are less likely to
- participate in a regular program. Smoking is a "no-no" for all Americans.
- And take any chest pain seriously, seeking help at its first appearance.
- Remember, the health rules you read about are for your information and
- benefit. They can only help though if you follow them.
-
- ----------------
-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
-